Hello Susan! and all!

Hey Susan how are you doing? And thanks Sandra and Earl for questioning
about the pain. I’m getting more in tune with my body! But I have the
question too? I was in a car accident in 2001 and I also work in
nursing so back pain or sometime shoulder pain or other pains are pains
that I will peobaly have the rest of my Life! If you could help me
Steve that would be great! Because somethings I don’t really
understand! And I have tryed to get into the chat room but havn’t been
able to I’m really a computer moron! Does it cost anything to join the
chat room? Because whenever I try you have to pay! Am I doing something
wrong? And the reason for the sugarfree gum and candy and twizzlers, is
because it helps me with breaking the habit of Subciously reaching for
a cigarette! I have smoked for 35 yrs! I allso eat sm meals healthy
ones and drink lots of juice! Take Care! Rhonda

One Response to “Hello Susan! and all!”

  1. Kelvin Janessa Says:

    Hi Rhonda,

    Exactly. There are reasons for every cigarette you subconsciously or
    consciously reached for. What I’d like you to do is learn what those
    reasons are so that you can ‘reach for’ precisely what you need rather than
    a random oral replacement. Random reaching doesn’t break or even
    significantly change a habit.
    A cigarette is a very specific response to very specific needs. It’s either
    a way to top up sagging nicotine levels and reverse or eliminate,
    temporarily, the onset of nicotine withdrawal symptoms or it’s a way to
    change body cues that are the result of situations in life such as hunger,
    anger, fatigue, boredom, etc. Rhonda, you can determine just what it is
    that your body needs and provide focused effective responses and that’s how
    you can change your smoking habit within a very short time. The way to
    begin to understand what your body needs is by paying attention to you

    body. That takes a bit of practice as subconscious responses (reaching for
    a cigarette) tend to stay subconscious. Set a timer! (Here he goes with the
    timer again…)
    Because you’re not in the habit of recognizing in detail what your body
    needs until it becomes critical or intense, you need some external device
    that will remind you to pay attention for only a moment, but frequently,
    through a day. I suggest a basic timer, you find what works for you. But
    please, start to check in with your body and begin to change your 35year habit.
    Steve

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